An Honor Killer and His Accomplices Finally Face Justice

Yaser Abdel Said, accused of honor killing his two teenage daughters, Amina and Sarah, escaped arrest for 12 years with help from sympathetic relatives.

I will never forget that New Year’s Day in 2008, when Egyptian-born taxi driver Yaser Said coldly shot his two beautiful daughters to death in his cab. Their names were Sarah and Amina, and they had bravely tried to save their own lives – but their mother, Tissie (Patricia), had lured them back home to be murdered.

She has never been charged, although her husband, son and brother-in-law are all behind bars.

At the time, I spoke to some of the women in Tissie’s family, who confirmed that Yaser Said had routinely battered, sexually violated, and threatened his daughters with death. His wife covered this up, minimized and denied it, and forced the girls to recant what they had once told child welfare officials.

Their brother Islam pleaded guilty last week to three felonies related to helping his fugitive father evade capture. Islam Said also stalked and threatened his sisters. He was following his father’s explicit orders as well as the example he set.

Yaser Abdel Said was arrested last August. His brother, Yassein, is due to stand trial on Monday for his role in helping Yaser Said evade capture. Yassein and Islam Said harbored Yaser inside an apartment in Bedford, Texas until a maintenance worker spotted Yaser on Aug. 14, 2017. After the maintenance worker reported the sighting to the FBI, an agent was dispatched to interview Islam, but Islam refused to cooperate.

He later harbored his father inside a home in Justin, Texas that belonged to his cousin. On Aug. 25, 2020 FBI agents saw Islam and Yassein Said deliver grocery bags to the residence, then followed the men to a shopping center 20 miles away, where they dumped trash retrieved from the home.

Yaser Said’s wife, Patricia (“Tissie”), persuaded her daughters to recant accusations of sexual abuse prior to the murders.

After hearing of the girls’ murders, I wanted to hear what a mother and a brother in such a family might sound like. I wanted to give them a chance to tell me the story from their point of view. I got Islam on the phone more than a decade ago, and before I could ask him anything, he started cursing, threatening, warning me never to call him again. His rage started at a super-sonic level and then escalated into the stratosphere. I once got Tissie on the phone too—she whispered, “I’m not supposed to talk to you,” but with an edge of viciousness (or terror) in her voice. She told me not to call her.

What a mother. I kept calling for the police to arrest Tissie as an accomplice, but they never have. At a certain point, I decided that she might be mentally impaired as well as a victim of domestic violence. She did marry Yaser Said when she was 14-15 years old and when he was already twice her age.

Women do play a role in honor killings. I published a study in 2015 about that. It found that women’s roles in honor violence tends to be minimized because male-on-female violence is far more visible, dramatic, and epidemic. That doesn’t mean women aren’t acting as conspirator-accomplices or even hands-on-killers of female relatives, including daughters.

Uppsala University academic Recep Dogan published a paper in 2018 in which he interviewed four Turkish women imprisoned for their roles in honor killings. European law enforcement have sometimes been known to arrest accomplices, both male and female; but with the exception of the Shafia case, Canada and the United States have failed to do so.

Islam Yaser-Abdel Said pled guilty last week to “helping a capital murder suspect (his father) evade capture for more than 12 years.”

Last week, Islam Yaser-Abdel Said finally pleaded guilty to “helping a capital murder suspect (his father) evade capture for more than 12 years.”

U.S. Attorney Prerak Shah thanked the “dogged work of the FBI and law enforcement” and characterized Said as a man who “prioritized the whims of his father, an alleged killer, over justice for his own sisters.”

And now, Texas Tissie has nothing left. Her husband and her daughters have all been gone for 12 years; her only son, Islam, is finally behind bars where he belongs.

While justice is coming, it remains frustrating that it took so long. How could this trio of violent and vicious men manage to hide in plain sight, in two nearby, nondescript houses in the same Texas city? Yaser Said essentially placed himself under house arrest, Saddam Hussein-style, in a hole. Apparently, he never went out. His son and brother brought him groceries and dropped his trash 20 miles away.

I sincerely congratulate federal and state law enforcement officials for finally arresting Yaser’s accomplices. No honor murder is committed by one relative alone. Extended families, entire communities, are involved and culpable.

If the United States wants to abolish honor murders in our country, we must not only arrest the perpetrator, we must also arrest and convict the collaborators, enablers, and co-conspirators.

Phyllis Chesler, a writing fellow at the Middle East Forum, is an emerita professor of psychology and women’s studies and the author of twenty books, including Women and Madness, Islamic Gender Apartheid, An American Bride in Kabul, A Politically Incorrect Feminist., and A Family Conspiracy: Honor Killings.

An analyst of gender issues in the Middle East, a psychotherapist and a feminist, Phyllis Chesler co-founded the Association for Women in Psychology in 1969, the National Women’s Health Network in 1975, and is emerita professor of psychology at The City University of New York. She has published 15 books, most recently An American Bride in Kabul (2013) which won the National Jewish Book Award for 2013. Chesler’s articles have appeared in numerous publications, including the Middle East Quarterly, Encyclopedia Judaica, International Herald Tribune, National Review, New York Times, Times of London, Washington Post and Weekly Standard. Based on her studies about honor killings among Muslims and Hindus, she has served as an expert courtroom witness for women facing honor-based violence. Her works have been translated into 13 languages. Follow Phyllis Chesler on Twitter @Phyllischesler
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